HP Mini 110-1030NR 10.1-Inch Black Netbook - 6.75 Hours of Battery Life
TRAVEL LIGHT, STAY CONNECTED: Whether computing within your home, around town and campus, or across the country, the ultra-portable HP Mini 110 can keep you connected with built-in Wi-Fi. It has the performance you need to surf the web and use your standard productivity software apps -- but is light enough to carry everywhere at just 2.57 lbs. It syncs files, photos and videos easily with your primary notebook or desktop PC whenever connected to the same network with the integrated SyncablesTM app. After initial SyncablesTM setup, the file updates will occur in the background for a truly seamless experience. The HP Mini 110: The perfect mobile companion. ULTRA MOBILE PERFORMANCE: Based on an architecture that optimizes internet access and basic communication, Intel Atom processors power the HP Mini's reliable, energy-efficient performance. The LED anti-glare widescreen display reduces both system weight and reflections that can distract from the visual experience. The 92% of full-size keyboard also improves weight without sacrificing comfort. Integrated 802.11b/g wireless LAN enables wireless access within range of a hotspot. The HP Mini 110 series: Designed to optimize ultra mobile performance. What's in the box: Mini 110-1030nr, 30W AC Adapter, 6-Cell Lithium-Ion battery, Symantec Norton Internet Security 2009 with 60 days complimentary live update, Syncables Mobile Desktop 5, Microsoft Works, Adobe Acrobat Reader and HP Games Powered by Wild Tangent
HP Mini 110-1030NR 10.1-Inch Black Netbook - 6.75 Hours of Battery Life Features
- 10.1" Diagonal SD LED Anti-glare Widescreen Display (1024x576), Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950
- 160GB (5400RPM) SATA Hard Drive
- 1 GB DDR2 RAM (1 Dimm) (1 GB Maximum)
- 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 Processor
Price: $400.00
User Reviews about HP Mini 110-1030NR 10.1-Inch Black Netbook - 6.75 Hours of Battery Life
okay where do i begin..... i purchased the "netbook" at the post exchange in camp Buering kuwait last september. Since then it has been to Iraq, The US, kuwait again, and back to Iraq. As you can imagine an infantryman in the army is going to use and abuse his equipment, and i have. its been dropped, dusted out, had water spilled on it, juice spilled on it, jp-8(diesel fuel) spilled on it, its been dealing with 210v's being supplied to it, it has traveled by humvee, mrap, c-130,c-17, blackhawk,and chinook all while in my pocket (very portable), it has been turned off maybe 40 times since i bought it(this thing has been on for a month at a time), iall in all this thing has pretty much survived a deployment to iraq, its obviously tough. i love this thing!!! not to mention i bought a 20 dollar used disk drive and a 70 dollar external hard drive and now i have all the storage i could ever want plus the ability to use disks; programs, music, movies, games.... they all work fine.
My only gripe with this thing is it can be a little slower then a desktop computer when i have itunes, firefox, VLC, word, and powerpoint running at the same time. But hey its small and portable so i guess that probably means the mini stuff inside it probably aint as quick as its big brother, i expected that.
over all if you need a dependable, cheap computer .... this is the ranch truck of computers. at 250 dollars a piece, you wont need to worry to much about the safty of your computer, and it probably wont break but if you somehow manage, you could just get another one. this is the netbook to buy!!! or maybe even a laptop replacement. -- a tough cheap near substitute to a laptop
I bought this for travel purposes. I used to have an HP Omnibook 800 (it's still around in the closet somewhere), which is sort of an ancestor of this idea, but with a much higher battery burn rate, due to the technology of the day. I ran Linux on it, and wrote my Ph.D. thesis on the thing. The form factor is great.
Today I find that technology and marketing have finally caught up with the idea of small form factor laptops, and they work better too. The Intel atom is a fairly powerful chip; it runs my software (which is all mathematical in nature, and more or less a direct test of CPU speed) at speeds comparable to a core duo Macbook at a slightly higher clock rate. I'm impressed. Even more impressive is the battery life, which, compared to the macbook, seems virtually infinite. It also loaded Ubuntu 9.10 fairly painlessly: much easier than upgrading OS-X on a macbook, and it seems to work better with limited memory. No reason to use the pre-loaded WinXP, though I kept it around just in case. Over all it seems very sturdy; I'm not worried about dropping this one. This particular model also has an excellent matte screen; glossy screens annoy the bejeepers out of me. Speaking of gloss, the dumb swirlie patterns on the case do help disguise finger markings a bit, however, making the case out of matte plastic (like the Omnibook was) would have worked better.
Downsides: the battery does stick out annoyingly. It's a clever engineering compromise, but it is a pain when you try to stash the thing in anything resembling a standard netbook case. I haven't gotten used to the weird trackpad yet: I don't see why they didn't stick the buttons underneath like everyone else does. Maybe a trackpad that much closer to the keyboard would have been inconvenient in a different way, so I'll live with it.
-- Great netbook so far
The shipping was fast and the product was as described.
I would buy again and recommend this seller. -- Fast shipping. Product as described. Would buy again